The Michigan Daily I michigandaily.com I Thursday, October10, 2013 University alumni Noel Gordon and Zesheng Chen attended the same party their freshman year, but had drastically different experiences. Gordon, a former col- umnist for The Michigan Daily, experienced a racially charged confrontation with another partygoer, while Chen had the time of his life. Still, for both men, the party helped them realize how their racial identities couldn't be separated from their identities as queer. Not long after, during the winter semester of 2012, Gordon and Chen founded the Coalition for Queer People of Color. That story is how LSA seniors Alex Ngo and Ozi Uduma recounted the formation of the Coalition for Queer People of Color. Ngo and Uduma serve as two of the three current co-chairs of the Coalition, and explained how Gordon and Chen recognized the ways other student organizations weren't always welcoming to queer students of color. "I think generally they just found that, in the spaces where they were supposed to feel comfortable and sup- posed to feel the most themselves, they still felt this kind of conflict happening where they maybe had to put their sexual orientation up front first and kind of leave their racial identity to the back burner in order to fit in," Ngo said. "The Coalition came about as a way to fill that need." No such thing as a single-issue struggle When Ngotried to be a part of Asian spaces and com- munities on campus, he confronted an obstacle. As a queer Asian, he wasn't always welcome in these groups, which were unified through their racial identities-but didn't really allow Ngo to also bring his queer identity to the table. Sometimes the Asian students around him would even say homophobic remarks, leading him to consider whether he should hide his queer identity. Uduma, a Martha Cook Diversity Peer Educator and the daughter of Nigerian immigrants, explained that spaces for people of color on campus sometimes carry a fear or uneasiness about confronting and discuss- ing sexuality. Their third co-chair, LSA senior Ramiro Alvarez Cabriales, agreed and spoke specifically in terms of the Latin@ community on campus. "I think the biggest scapegoat when interacting in predominantly Latin@ student of color spaces is that it is in our culture to be hyper-masculine or that it is inherently in our culture to be heteronormative," Cabriales said. "Those spaces can be very homophobic." Not only do the clubs for students of particular racial or ethnic identities not always welcome queer people, but some of the predominantly white LGBTQ groups on campus also have a disconnect when it comes to race. Cabriales and Uduma both expressed their frustra- tion with the "gay is the new black" rhetoric that some LGBTQ organizations have adopted. "What if you're both?" Cabriales asked. When LGBTQ organizations try to equate racial oppression to oppression based on sexuality, they ignore and marginalize queer people of color. Cabriales and Ngo's racial identities can't be separated from their queerness, and yet in some spaces, they were made to feel like they should prioritize one over the other. "Tokenizing happens a lot - fetishizing, exotifi- cation of black and brown bodies," Cabriales said of. predominantly white LGBTQ spaces. "It's made very evident that we are different in queer spaces. It's made very evident that either we are unwelcome or obsessed over in this weird 'I want to hook up with a brown boy' kind of way." These queer spaces on campus often reflect the agen- da of the mainstream LGBTQ movement, which simi- larly doesn't speak for or include queer people of color. The mainstream movement is currently very focused on marriage equality and the rights attached to mar- riage, and this priority doesn't necessarily always reso- nate with communities of color. "I used to be undocumented, and most of my fam- ily continues to be undocumented," Cabriales said. "I feel like I'm wasting my time to continue to talk about marriage when there are queer people who are undocu- mented. Marriage isn't evena possibility for them." "My parents are straight and don't even have health insurance," Cabriales said, emphasizing how the fight for marriage equality sometimes ignores broader social justice issues. "I experience homosexuality in a very different way because of the way my family is structured," Cabria- les said. "I experience it in more than one language, in more than one country, and white Americans don't get that. They don't get that sometimes you have to come out in English, sometimes in Spanish. You have to find words for both, because no one is taught the words to come out ever because you're presumed to be straight from birth." See RADICAL LOVE, Page 3B